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Ecologic Relationships of Ethnic Groups in Swat, North Pakistan

Fredrik Barth
- 01 Dec 1956 - 
- Vol. 58, Iss: 6, pp 1079-1089
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors apply a more specific ecologic approach to a case study of distribution by utilizing some of the concepts of animal ecology, particularly the concept of a niche-the place of a group in the total environment, its relations to resources and competitors.
Abstract
THE importance of ecologic factors for the form and distribution of cultures has usually been analyzed by means of a culture area concept. This concept has been developed with reference to the aboriginal cultures of North America (Kroeber 1939). Attempts at delimiting culture areas in Asia by similar procedures have proved extremely difficult (Bacon 1946, Kroeber 1947, Miller 1953), since the distribution of cultural types, ethnic groups, and natural areas rarely coincide. Coon (1951) speaks of Middle Eastern society as being built on a mosaic principle--many ethnic groups with radically different cultures co-reside in an area in symbiotic relations of variable intimacy. Referring to a similar structure, Furnivall (1944) describes the Netherlands Indies as a plural society. The common characteristic in these two cases is the combination of ethnic segmentation and economic interdependence. Thus the "environment" of any one ethnic group is not only defined by natural conditions, but also by the presence and activities of the other ethnic groups on which it depends. Each group exploits only a section of the total environment, and leaves large parts of it open for other groups to exploit. This interdependence is analogous to that of the different animal species in a habitat. As Kroeber (1947:330) emphasizes, culture area classifications are essentially ecologic; thus detailed ecologic considerations, rather than geographical areas of subcontinental size, should offer the point of departure. The present paper attempts to apply a more specific ecologic approach to a case study of distribution by utilizing some of the concepts of animal ecology, particularly the concept of a niche-the place of a group in the total environment, its relations to resources and competitors (cf. Allee 1949:516).

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Trade and Its Origins on the Botletli River, Botswana

TL;DR: In this article, the causes of trade in the Botletli trade were discussed and the roles played by habitat diversity, mobility, and competition in this process. But, the authors did not consider the role of habitat diversity in trade.
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"Community Work" in a Climate of Adaptation: Responding to Change in Rural Alaska

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors draw on their research experiences with municipal workers in Alaska to examine adaptation and related concepts, such as resilience and vulnerability, which have become widely used in science and policy formulation for addressing climate change despite also being subject to multiple critiques.
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Overview: Sixty Years in Anthropology

TL;DR: The authors have used generative modeling to identify the empirical processes that, in their aggregate, shape social and cultural forms in the Middle East, New Guinea, Indonesia, and the Himalayas, as well as Norway.
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Pastoral Practices and Their Transformation in the North-Western Karakoram

Hermann Kreutzmann
- 01 Dec 2004 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a case study from a Karakoram mountain valley which illustrates the dynamics and changing importance of animal husbandry in combined mountain agriculture (see Ehlers and Kreutzmann 2000).
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A Comparison of Two Contemporaneous Lifestyles of the Late Second Millennium B.C.

TL;DR: In the late second millennium B.C., material culture excavated in the lowlands and the hill country traditionally have been attributed to two ethnic groups described in the Old Tes... as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

The Division of Labour in Society

TL;DR: In this paper, Durkheim's Life and Work: Timeline 1858-1917- Suggestions for Further Reading- Original Translator's Note- The Division of Labour in Society by Emile Durkhere- Preface to the First Edition (1893) - Preface and introduction to the Second Edition (1902) - Introduction - Part I: The Method of Determining This Function - Part II: THE CAUSES and CONDITIONS- 8 The Progress of the Division of labour and of Happiness- 9 The Causes- 10 Secondary Factors- 11
Book

Principles of animal ecology

W. C. Allee
Book

Cultural and natural areas of native North America

TL;DR: Wertheim as discussed by the authors developed the subject matter in a logical and comprehensive way, and dealt with the various portions at a length commensurate to their relative importance, and made several innovations which should meet with approval by all.
Journal ArticleDOI

Netherlands India: A Study of Plural Economy.

Hailey, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1939 - 
TL;DR: The years of confusion, 1795-1815 4. The years of uncertainty, 1815-1830 5. The culture system, 1830-1850 6. The transition to liberalism, 1850-1870 7. Liberalism, 1870-1900 8. Efficiency, welfare and autonomy 9. Administrative and political reforms 10. Economic progress 11. Social economy 12. Some effects of the crisis of 1929 13. Plural economy Indexes 14.
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